|
Leading from Within: Poetry That Sustains the Courage to Lead Sam M. Intrator and Megan Scribner Format: Hardcover, 288pp. ISBN: 9780787988692 Publisher: Jossey-Bass Pub. Date: September 21, 2007 Average Customer Review: For Bulk Orders Call: 626-441-2024 Description and Reviews From The Publisher: Leadership is more than principles or practices—it requires heart, courage, and wisdom, qualities that can be inspired and informed by poetry. In this beautiful collection of 93 poems, accompanied by a brief personal commentary, leaders reflect on how poetry helps them make sense of the challenges and possibilities in their work. The contributors represent a wide range of professions including Vanguard Group founder John Bogle, MoveOn.org cofounder Joan Blades, several members of Congress, Christian activist Brian McLaren, business guru Peter Senge, and leaders from business, medicine, education, nonprofits, law, politics, and religion. The poems include works by well-loved poets such as T.S. Eliot, Mary Oliver, William Stafford, Rumi, Langston Hughes, May Sarton, Pablo Neruda, Rainier Maria Rilke, Robert Frost, and Wendell Berry. As they did for teachers in their best-selling book Teaching with Fire, Sam M. Intrator and Megan Scribner inspire and nourish the hearts and souls of leaders of all kinds in Leading from Within. Reviews "Leading from Within is perhaps the most soulful treatment of leadership ever composed. Leadership is first an inner quest, and there is absolutely no better place to explore your inner territory than in the pages of this book. This is an evocative work of art; do yourself an immense favor, and engage with these amazing and diverse leaders and their poems." —Jim Kouzes, coauthor of the bestselling The Leadership Challenge and A Leader's Legacy "Leading from Within makes brillant use of the world's great poets to inspire us to lead with our hearts as well as our heads. It calls to the deeper purpose and meaning within all of us to use our gifts to serve others." —Bill George, author, True North: Discover Your Authentic Leadership "This is a superb collection of poems and deeply personal reflections from a wide range of real leaders. It is a gift to all of us who believe in bringing our hearts to our work." —Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) "The entries in this wonderful anthology are a joy to read and all the more interesting because of their special meaning to the leaders who recommended them. It is a book that every nonprofit leader should place among those they draw upon for inspiration every day." —Diana Aviv, president and CEO, Independent Sector "Leading from Within offers a candid view straight into the heart and soul of leaders striving to do good and effective work in the world. The poems and commentaries remind us that leadership is always deeply personal and chock-full of dilemmas that must be addressed by creativity, passion, imagination, and courage." —Jeff Swartz, president and CEO, Timberland
About the Authors Sam M. Intrator is a professor at Smith College and founder of the Smith College Urban Education Initiative. A Kellogg National Leadership Fellow, he is the author/editor of five books, including Tuned In and Fired Up, Teaching with Fire, and Stories of the Courage to Teach. Megan Scribner is an editor who also documents and evaluates programs for nonprofits. She is the coeditor of Teaching with Fire and coauthor with Parker J. Palmer of The Courage to Teach Guide for Reflection and Renewal, Tenth Anniversary Edition. Table of Contents Foreword by Madeleine K. Albright. A Note to Our Readers by Sam M. Intrator and Megan Scribner. Gratitudes. Introduction by Parker J. Palmer. 1. Called. Alfred Lord Tennyson’s ‘Ulysses’. Reflection by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., president, Waterkeeper Alliance. Emily Dickinson’s ‘XXXII’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Nicole Gagnon, student leader. Langston Hughes’s ‘Madam’s Calling Cards’. Reflection by Kyle Dodson, high school principal. William Stafford’s ‘The Way It Is’. Reflection by Michael Intrator, managing director, emissions trading company. William Carlos Williams’s ‘Asphodel, That Greeny Flower’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Peter S. Temes, president, ILO Institute. Reinhold Niebuhr’s ‘Nothing that is worth doing can be achieved in our lifetime’. Reflection by Rosemary Jordano Shore, founder, ChildrenFirst. William Blake’s ‘songs of Innocence’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Michael Singleton, director of coaching, Massachusetts Youth Soccer Association. Gary Snyders’s ‘For the Children’. Reflection by Betsy Taylor, founder, Center for the New American Dream. Theodore Roethke’s ‘Cuttings later’. Reflection by Brian D. McLaren, author, speaker, evangelical activist. T. S. Eliot’s ‘Four Quartets’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Kathleen Kostelny, international consultant on children affected by war andviolence. Marge Piercy’s ‘To Be of Use’. Reflection by Martha Bergmark, president, Mississippi Center for Justice. Eugene McCarthy’s ‘Ares’. Reflection by Mary Beth Yarrow, documentary film producer. 2. Defining Moments. Adrienne Rich’s ‘In Those Years’. Reflection by Peter Karoff, founder and chairman, The Philanthropic Initiative. Wendell Berry’s ‘A Vision’. Reflection by Barbara Hummel, corporate and nonprofit facilitator. William Shakespeare’s ‘sonnet 29’. Reflection by Orli Cotel national publicist, Sierra Club. Denise Levertov’s ‘The Avowal’. Reflection by Craig Dykstra, senior vice president, Lilly Endowment. Marge Piercy’s ‘The seven of pentacles’. Reflection by Jake B. Schrum, president, Southwestern University. Naomi Shihab Nye’s ‘The Art of Disappearing’ . Reflection by Ted Falcon, rabbi and radio host. T. S. Eliot’s ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Joseph L. Subbiondo, president, California Institute of Integral Studies. William Ayot’s ‘The Contract’. Reflection by Geoff Bellman, leadership consultant and author. Amelia Earhart’s ‘Courage’. Reflection by John Wimmer, program director, Lilly Endowment. William Stafford’s ‘Listening’. Reflection by David Brooks Andrews, journalist. Naomi Shihab Nye's ‘Adios’. Reflection by Pamela Seigle, executive director, Center for Courage & Renewal Northeast. 3. Sometimes It Aches. Ghalib’s ‘For the raindrop, joy is in entering the river’. Reflection by Ann Myers, school superintendent. Mary Oliver’s ‘spring Azures’. Reflection by Bonnie Allen, president, Center for Law & Renewal. William Blake’s ‘Auguries of Innocence’. Reflection by James O’Leary, Catholic priest. Judy Sorum Brown’s ‘Trough’. Reflection by Linda Wolfe, small-business owner. Rumi’s ‘Childhood Friends’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Karen E. Adams, physician and program director. Langston Hughes’s ‘Mother to Son’. Reflection by Estrus Tucker, president and CEO, Liberation Community, Inc.. Yehuda Amichai’s ‘End of Elul’. Reflection by Liz Lerman, artistic director, Liz Lerman Dance Exchange. Carol Prejean Zippert’s ‘When You Get Lost’. Reflection by Tom Beech, president and CEO, Fetzer Institute. Henry Nouwen’s ‘Work Around Your Abyss’. Reflection by John Marston, administrator, Alternative Schools and Character Education. Gabriela Mistral’s ‘Daybreak’. Reflection by Sandra P. Daley, pediatrician and medical school dean. Mark Nepo’s ‘Acceptance’. Reflection by Wayne Muller, minister and author. 4. Pay Attention. David Wagoner’s ‘Lost’. Reflection by Peter Senge, founding chair, Society for Organizational Learning. Rainer Maria Rilke’s ‘I want to unfold’. Reflection by Bill White, pastor, Emmanuel Reform Church. John O’Donohue’s ‘Fluent’. Reflection by Carla M. Dahl, psychotherapist and dean at Bethal Seminary. Tao Ching’s ‘#33’. Reflection by Kevin Fickenscher, executive vice president, Healthcare Transformation at Perot Systems. David Whyte’s ‘The Opening of Eyes’. Reflection by Hanna B. Sherman, physician and medical educator. William Ernest Henley’s ‘Invictus’. Reflection by David J. Garren, professor, U.S. Naval Academy. Nevin Compton Trammell’s ‘I’m Tired’. Reflection by Karen Lee Turner, pastoral musician. Yehuda Amichai’s ‘The Diameter of the Bomb’. Reflection by Howie Schaffer, media spokesperson, Pubic Education Network. Rainer Maria Rilke’s ‘The Panther’. Reflection by David C. Leach, physician and executive director of Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. William Stafford’s ‘With Kit, Age 7, At the Beach’. Reflection by Lee Rush, founder and executive director, justCommunity, Inc.. Pablo Neruda’s ‘XXXI’. Reflection by Tony Deifell, founding board member, KaBOOM!. William Butler Yeats’s ‘The Lover Pleads with Friends for Old Friends’. Reflection by Jim McDermott, congressman,. Robert Frost’s ‘Mending Wall’. Reflection by Adam Bunting, high school administrator. 5. The Real Bottom Line. Mary Oliver’s ‘The Ponds’. Reflection by James A. Autry, author and former Fortune 500 executive. Wallace Stevens’s ‘The Pleasures of Merely Circulating’. Reflection by Joan Blades, founder, MoveOn.org. Robert Frost’s ‘The Road Not Taken’. Reflection by James E. Rogers, president and CEO, Energy Corporation. Charles Simic’s ‘stone’. Reflection by Dean Conway, middle school teacher and coach. Wendell Berry’s ‘sabbaths’. Reflection by Jay F. Smith, superintendent, United Methodist Church. W. H. Auden’s ‘After Reading a Child's Guide to Modern Physics’. Reflection by Eric Walsh, physician and associate chairman of Family Medicine. Paul Mariani’s ‘The Peaceable Kingdom’. Reflection by Robert (Chip) Wood, elementary school principal. Stephen Spender’s ‘The Truly Great’. Reflection by Betty Sue Flowers, director, Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library and Museum. Rabindranath Tagore’s ‘The Grasp of Your Hand’. Reflection by L. J. Rittenhouse, president, and beyond Communications. Mary Oliver’s ‘What I Have Learned So Far’. Reflection by Paul Batalden, physician and medical educator. Billy Collins’s ‘The Night House’. Reflection by Sterling K. Speirn, president and CEO, W. K. Kellogg Foundation. 6. Dare to Endure. Robert Browning’s ‘Andrea del Sarto’. Reflection by Harry Barnes, former ambassador, Romania, India, and Chile. Ezzeddin Nasafi’s ‘Oh, my friend’. Reflection by Charles Gibbs, executive director, United Religions Initiative. Jack Gilbert’s ‘The Abnormal Is Not Courage’. Reflection by Jim Burke, author and high school teacher. Ibn Arabi’s ‘There was a time I would reject those’. Reflection by Eboo Patel, founder and executive director, Interfatih Youth Corp.. Winston O. Abbott’s ‘sing with the Wind’. Reflection by Annie Goeke de La Bouillerie, co-director, Earth Rights Institute. Rumi’s ‘What is This Fragrance’. Reflection by Jamal Rahman, Muslim Sufi minister at Interfaith community church. Reb Nachman’s ‘The entire world is a very narrow bridge’. Reflection by Jaime Banks, communications researcher. Seamus Heaney’s ‘The Cure at Troy’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Doug Tanner, founder, The Faith & Politics Institute. Kenneth Patchen’s ‘In Order To’. Reflection by Peter Pollard, public education director, Stop It Now!. William Butler Yeats’s ‘Earth, Fire and Water’. Reflection by Elizabeth A. Keene Reder, bereavement coordinator, John Hopkins Children’s Center. Holly Near’s ‘The Rock Will Wear Away’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Tammy Baldwin, congresswoman. 7. Leading Together. Robert Creeley’s ‘The Warning’. Reflection by Dan Wieden, founder, Wieden!!PAGER PLEASE NOTE: insert a plus sign between the two names!! Kennedy ad agency. Langston Hughes’s ‘Let America Be America Again’ [Excerpt] and Countee Cullen’s ‘Yet Do I Marvel’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Linda K. Bowen, executive director, Institute for Community Peace. Walt Whitman’s ‘song of the Open Road’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Janet Tiebout Hanson, founder, 85 Broads. Louis MacNeice’s ‘snow’. Reflection by Irene Martin, Episcopal priest and commercial fisher. Emily Dickinson’s ‘I dwell in Possibility’. Reflection by Eileen Quinn, senior communications director, PATH. Wislawa Szymborska’s ‘A Note’. Reflection by Billy Shore, executive director, Share our Strength. Claudia Schmidt’s ‘For the Birds / Replenish’. Reflection by Molly Anderson, food systems scholar. Liz Rosenberg’s ‘In the end we are all light’. Reflection by Ted Lord, president and CEO, Humanities Washington. May Sarton’s ‘All Souls’. Reflection by Patricia E. de Jong, minister, First Congregational Church of Berkeley. Hafiz’s ‘How do I listen’’’. Reflection by Pat Moore Harbour, founding director, Healing The Heart of Diversity. Emily Dickinson’s ‘#1129’. Reflection by Thomas B. Coburn, president, Naropa University. Robert Service’s ‘The Spell of the Yukon’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by Linda Chamberlain, epidemiologist and founding director, Alaska Family Violence Prevention Project. Martin Luther King Jr.’s ‘If you want to be important. . . .’. Reflection by Jim Kielsmeier, founder, president, and CEO, National Leadership Youth Council. 8. Back At It. Thich Nhat Hanh’s ‘For Warmth’. Reflection by Henry Emmons, physician and author. Robert Frost’s ‘Directive’. Reflection by Tom Allen, congressman. Judy Sorum Brown’s ‘Fire’. Reflection by Becky van der Bogert, school superintendent. Daisy Zamora’s ‘song of Hope’. Reflection by Kathleen Gille, congressional aide. Lao Tzu’s ‘The uses of not’. Reflection by Peter Schneider, architect. Naomi Shihab Nye’s ‘Kindness’. Reflection by Lois Capps, congresswoman. Robert Hayden’s ‘Those Winter Sundays’. Reflection by Brian Dunlap, high school administrator. William Wordsworth’s ‘Tintern Abbey’. Reflection by Carol Tecla Christ, president, Smith College. Wendell Berry’s ‘The Peace of Wild Things’. Reflection by Carolyn J. Lukensmeyer, president and founder, AmericaSpeaks. William Stafford’s ‘silver Star’. Reflection by Diana Chapman Walsh, president, Wessley College. Alfred Lord Tennyson’s ‘Ulysses’ [Excerpt]. Reflection by John C. Bogle, founder, The Vanguard Group. 9. Leading with Fire: Using Poetry in Our Life and Work. Afterword by David Whyte, The Center for Courage & Renewal. The Editors. Find Items On Similar Subjects Questions of Character: Illuminating the Heart of Leadership Through Literature |
The Essential Lists BOOKS TO READ BEFORE YOU LEAD Grow Your Leadership Skills NEW AND UPCOMING LEADERSHIP BOOKS Classic Leadership Books BOOKS TO READ BEFORE YOU LEAD |
| |||
© 2020 LeadershipNow™ All materials contained in https://www.LeadershipNow.com are protected by copyright and trademark laws and may not be used for any purpose whatsoever other than private, non-commercial viewing purposes. Derivative works and other unauthorized copying or use of stills, video footage, text or graphics is expressly prohibited. |